Itâs a great idea. An obvious idea. And now it is going to happen. Driven by the formidable pair of 2006 U.S. Open champion Geoff Ogilvy and former European Tour player Mike Clayton, the inaugural Sandbelt Invitational will take place Dec. 20-23. Four of Melbourneâs world-famous collection of coursesâRoyal Melbourne, Kingston Heath, Peninsula Kingswood and Yarra Yarraâwill host one round each in a 72-hole event with 60-strong mixture of male and female pros and amateurs, a relatively low-key start to what both men hope will evolve into one of Australiaâs biggest tournaments.
The potential is obvious, the philosophy novel in a world typically driven only by financial matters. Yes, Ogilvyâs eponymous foundation is kicking in a $50,000 (Australian) purseâand other sponsors will hopefully be in place by December. But for now the motivation is more altruistic than economic.
âClayts has to take most of the credit for the idea,â Ogilvy told Golf Digest. âA couple of months ago we heard that the Australian Open was unlikely to happen [the menâs and womenâs events were officially cancelled last week for the second year due to the pandemic], at which point Mike decided we had to have something in its place. Weâve been doing a few little things over the last few months, one-day 18-hole events that gave promising youngsters opportunities to play some competitive golf. So he called round a few clubs in Melbourne to see if we could expand that to a four-day deal.â
It didnât take long. Ogilvy describes the reaction as âunbelievable.â Royal Melbourne was in straight away. Peninsula said yes within 30 seconds. Yarra Yarra and Kingston Heath followed quickly, too.
âOnce we had the clubs involved, we sat down and thought about the field,â Ogilvy said. âThe actual breakdown isnât too clear right now because of COVID travel restrictions, so weâll have to see how that pans out. But weâll have the best field we can get, both men and women, professionals and amateurs.â
That concept, too, is an extension of what the Ogilvy/Clayton team has been doing with what they call âthe game,â a series of one-day 18-hole events with men and women competing against each other designed to provide promising young Australians with competitive opportunities in these trying times.
âI want to make it clear the Sandbelt Invitational is not going to be like a ânormalâ event,â says Clayton, who, much to the amusement of all who know him, will be âtournament director.â âNot yet anyway. Itâs not going to be on television. There wonât be too many spectators. There wonât be any roped-off fairways or scoreboards. Itâs all about getting the best players we can find competing with each other again. But the real stars of the show will be the courses. Itâs not an event built round star names, which has been the norm down here for a few years.â
Ogilvy hopes the Sandbelt Invitational can provide playing opportunities for local golfers who have been limited in events they can compete in due to travel restrictions during the pandemic.
Michael Dodge
Disappointingly, it would seem unlikely that the leading Australians on the PGA TourâMarc Leishman, Cam Smith and Adam Scottâwill be able to tee-up this year. But the reaction from Ogilvy and Claytonâs fellow pros has been, as you might expect, unanimously positive.
âWhat a treat this will be, undeniably one of the best collection of golf courses worldwide,â said former Ryder Cup player Nicolas Colsaerts (whose wife is Australian) in a tweet.
Japanese Tour player Matt Griffin was even more effusive.
âSince the halcyon days of the 1990s, Australian golf has been all about who is not here rather than who is,â said the native Melburnian. âThis announcement is the perfect example that it might be time to celebrate who is here rather than who isnât. We have a heap of talent thatâs been starved of big tournaments for 24 months desperate to prove itself. If you forget about the names, the product is basically the same and possibly even better, as the Vic Open has proved.â
Speaking of which, the Sandbelt Invitational will offer exemptions into both the Vic Open (a mixed-event sanctioned by the European Tour and the LPGA) and, for the men, the Australian PGA Championship. Already, legitimacy is growing.
âI really hope this will expand every year, to the point where it becomes a really big and important event,â says Clayton, one of golfâs most erudite and thoughtful commentators on all things architectural. âBut we donât need a huge purse at this stage. That only raises expectations, ones we canât meet because of all the travel restrictions in place. Players from Western Australia, for example, canât come to Melbourne right now. So the money doesnât really matter that much.
âPeople have criticized Golf Australia for cancelling the Australian Open. But our event is different. Weâre not comparing apples with apples. We donât have to deal with sponsors or television. We have no expectations. All weâre trying to do this year is run an âamateurâ tournament with good players on great courses. And weâll see how it goes.â